The year 2025 seems to be a laboratory for bold experiments: fewer screens on the wrist, more origami in the pocket, satellites as “signal rescuers” and cars that understand the context of conversation. Below is a selection of ten ideas that are moving from geeky corners to habits. 10 products and technologies that will change the world in 2025 faster than we dare to admit!
Introducing 2025: the hallmark of this year's innovations in 2025 is a shift from spectacle to carefully measured utility. A ring instead of a watch, a phone that folds three times, a voice in the car that translates technical menus into human language, and home diagnostics that eliminate embarrassment and waiting rooms. The common denominator? Technology is stepping back from the stage and making room for our habits.
The year 2025 is full of “slightly frivolous” inventions that hide very serious consequences: a phone that folds three times, a car that answers with a natural voice, a toilet that analyzes your health, and satellites that wipe “without a signal.” This is a selection of technologies that are not necessarily perfect – but are good enough to change habits.
Apple ring (2026?): less screen, more data
The Apple Ring (2026?) is a logical piece of the Apple ecosystem: less screen, more data. The ring doesn't compete with the watch, it complements it - at night it measures sleep and HRV, during the day it serves as a silent security key and remote for the Vision Pro. Patents hint at gestures and payments, the ring market has momentum, Samsung's ring is here, and Apple is scoping out the terrain. If it launches, it will be the most discreet way to add health and identity to the iPhone. And without a screen, you can finally wear a mechanical watch while the ring silently performs the "heavy analytics" and unlocks devices. A necessity in 2025.
GamiFries: 3D-printed French Fries Holder for Nintendo Switch 2
GamiFries is a 3D-printed French fries holder that attaches to the Nintendo Switch 2 with magnets, combining gaming with nibbling. The file is free on MakerWorld, and the result is an ultra-ironic accessory: no pauses, no greasy fingers, no dilemma between frag and fries. The model is adapted to McDonald's 'medium' box and works in handheld and docked mode. The weight remains balanced, the magnets hold - and the meme becomes a practical gadget. Sometimes the least serious ideas really do change the world.
Samsung galaxy z trifold: pocket origami
The Samsung Galaxy Z Trifold is an origami phone: three-fold folding, about a 10-inch internal screen and Snapdragon 8 Elite. The first markets are said to be Korea and China, and the price is about 4 million won (about 2,880 $) – enough to make your wrist shake. The charm is in the way it is used: it is a tablet for multi-windows when opened, and a phone when folded, and the cameras are said to be similar to the Fold series. The biggest challenge will be weight and battery, but Samsung is once again daring where others are still drawing patents. The first such phones will be a reality in 2025.
DJI mirrorless 2026: a camera with Hasselblad DNA
DJI mirrorless 2026 is rumored to be a bold entry into the world of cameras: a full-frame sensor (around 45 MP), 4D stabilization from the Ronin 4D, video up to 4K/120 in 10-bit ProRes RAW and a pinch of Hasselblad color science. The point? DJI knows how to make a complex tool user-friendly. If the price is in the “enthusiast” class, we get a modular “lego” for creators that combines studio and field in one bag. The competition will have to step up – which is the healthiest fertilizer for innovation. The biggest expectation in 2025.
Apple + Starlink (iOS 18.3?): a phone that works even where there is "no signal"
Apple + Starlink (iOS 18.3?) is the vision of an iPhone that works without towers: directly to the satellite. This is no longer just SOS, but the basis for messages, location and basic data in dead zones. Less dependence on operators means a new type of mobility: “off-grid” as a backup, the network as a highway. If Apple presses the button, it will also be a pressure on the Android world – a signal-free experience will be the new normal for hikers, sailors and anyone who lives outside the cities.
Throne One: A toilet that teaches you prevention
Throne One is an AI toilet camera that analyzes urine and feces in real time and tells you in the app whether you are hydrated, how your digestion is working, and when it is wise to take action. It recognizes the user via Bluetooth, anonymizes and encrypts the data. The price is not cheap, but the comparison with the laboratory and time is loud. The device works via USB-C, supports iOS/Android, and – seriously – prefers to see a white toilet. Home diagnostics, minus the awkward conversations.
Tesla Grok: A Digital Co-Driver with Personality
Tesla roar is a voice assistant with character that brings natural conversation, QR linking, multiple voice personas, and the feeling of being able to tell your car almost anything to Teslas. From climate control and navigation to charging stations, it’s done through speech; the hard part is done in the cloud. Grok is a prelude to robo-taxis: when you get into a driverless car, you get a guide who understands the context of the route and your habits. A digital co-driver who explains what the car is doing.
Neuralink 2025: the brain gets its own “USB”
Neuralink 2025 is pragmatic cybernetics: a brain-computer implant that helps ALS and tetraplegics today, and tomorrow opens up “telepathy” to control the device and “blindsight” to restore vision. Users are already moving cursors and playing mind games, a surgical robot inserts electrodes in seconds. The goal is greater thought throughput – faster than a keyboard, closer to fluent communication with AI. Ethics remain key, but the first steps are realistic.
Year 20XX: the end of human driving (first in cities)
The year 20XX as the end of human driving is not a dystopia, but a statistic in the making: as machines become demonstrably safer, the status of the steering wheel will shift from a privilege to a responsibility. First, no-hands zones, then mandatory autopilot lanes, finally a ban on public roads. Insurance companies will do their part. The steering wheel will remain for Sundays and racetracks, but software will drive the day-to-day.
Tesla robotaxi: Austin as the first serious general
Tesla robotaxi In Austin, the switch from promise to pilot is underway: about a dozen Model Ys are running on a limited loop, with safety monitors and a flat rate of 4.20 $. Texas is introducing Level 4 vehicle permits, and the system is testing the weather, intersections and nerves of skeptics. Tesla is betting on cameras and computer vision without lidar. If the expansion succeeds, the promise of mass service will be based on reality for the first time – not on tweets.
Conclusion. From a ring that doesn't (yet) exist to robotaxis that are already driving: the technology of 2025 doesn't pretend to be perfect - it's enough for it to be useful. And usefulness is precisely the moment when a trend turns into a habit. The next shift? When these ideas leap from the geeky periphery into your daily routine.
Seemingly fun toys often make serious moves. When technology stops screaming and starts quietly helping, change happens faster than we notice. The next leap? When at least one of these ideas becomes your new, almost boring daily routine – and that's the ultimate compliment to innovation.